I thought I would have a little fun today and show you something which is not only simple to make but also very elegant, not to mention, delicious!
This is the perfect salad to serve as a first course when you are having people over for a summer meal. When I worked at the manor my boss was always very fond of layered first courses, and they always got ooh and aahd at the table from the guests.
Really they are not a lot of trouble to make. I have my own stainless steel ring that I use to layer things up in, but you could use clean and empty tin cans that you have carefully removed both ends from as well if you wanted to. They would actually also work very well.
This delicious salad has all the flavours of your traditional cob salad, except they have been layered to form a delicious looking stacked salad . . .
Crisp ice berg lettuce . . . creamy ripe avocado . . .
Chopped sweet tomatoes . . . crisp smokey bacon . . . .
Tangy blue cheese crumbles . . . and a deliciously creamy low fat dressing which is nicely flavoured with lemon . . .
You could also add a layer of cooked chicken or turkey if you wanted to, or ham, but really with the bacon, you wouldn't be needing any ham. Any way you stack it, this is sure to do down a real treat!
*Layered Cobb Salad*
Serves 4First make the dressing. Combine all of the ingredients in a jar and shake well together. Taste and adjust seasoning as required. You can use this dressing right away, or store, covered, in the refrigerator for up to one week.
Brown the bacon in a large skillet, over medium heat, until crisp. Scopp out and drain. Set aside. Taking four metal rings or clear glass dishes, layer up the salad ingredients, tossing the lettuce first with a small amount of dressing. Do this on individual chilled salad plates. I like to layer them with the lettuce first, then the avocado, then tomatoes, spring onions, cheese and bacin last. Press gently to compact, then carefully remove the rings. Drizzle with a bit more dressing, dust with some cracked black pepper and serve.
Of course if you don't want to go to all the trouble of layering things up, you can just combine them all in a salad bowl and serve as is!!
You will still be enjoying one mighty delicious salad! Bon Appetit!
I am so excited today to be able to show you this new cookery book by Sarah Britton, entitled Naturally Nourished, Healthy, delicious meals made with every day ingredients! What a perfect time of year to have a tasty book like this coming out, when the shops are filled to overflowing with fresh local produce!
Following the publication of her first book, "My New Roots, her fans were begging her for recies using wholesome, nutrient-rich foods, which would come together in a snap using fresh and local ingredients. Easy to find ingredients, rather than speciality ingredients. I have to say that Sarah has really come through with this book , with no less than 100 new recipes, using fresh, simple ingredients for inspired weeknight cooking!
Sarah brings to the table her signature bright photography and fantastic flavours that she is known for, showing us how to streamline vegetarian cooking with chapters on mains, sides, soups, salads and snacks (both sweet and savoury). Featuring delicious recipes such as Aubergine Cannelloni and Coconut, Cardamom Blueberry Snack Cake, she demonstrates easy cooking techniques that anyone can master, as well as icons for vegan and gluten-free options.
Almost every recipe also includes "Rollover" options for using leftovers in a different recipe from the book, encouraging readers to cook smart, not hard and with less waste!
The soup chapter gives you the option of three versions of Ministrone Soup . . . for the Spring, Summer and Autumn, along with fourteen other delicious sounding soups like Ginger-Lemon Split Pea and Garlic Cloud . . .
I am a real lover of salads . . . and who wouldn't be when faced with choices like Sprouted Mung Bean and Mango Avocado Cups or a Rainbow Hummus Bowl. 16 tasty salads to choose from!
Why not sit down for a delicious main like a ButternutSquash and Sage Oven Risotto, or Sweet Potato, Cauliflower and Coconut Casserole! Who says vegetarian food has to be boring? There are 23 tasty recipes in this chapter alone that will prove that vegetarian food is anything BUT boring!
Simple Sides and Small Plates. Fifteen ways to make your lunches and side dishes exciting, exciting . . . EXCITING! Brown Butter Carrots with Pistachios and Dill anyone??? I am so IN!!
Vegetarian Snacking doesn't mean you have to sit around munching on carrot and celery sticks while everyone around you is binging on meatier things. With a wide selection of both savoury and sweet snacks you can easily enjoy. Soured Cream and Onion Chickpea Crisps anyone? Don't mind if I do, and while you are at it, keep me some of those Toasted Walnut Brownie Bites, done in no less than THREE ways!
OH BOY! Brilliant Banana Almond Soft Serve.
Healthy never tasted so good!
Sarah Britton (BFA, CNP) is the acclaimed holistic nutritionist, writer, and photographer behind the cookbook My New Roots and the popular healthy foods blog of the same name which won a 2014 Saveur "Best Food Blog" award. http://www.mynewroots.org
She has been featured in O, The Oprah Magazine, Bon Appetit, Saveur, and Whole Living, and has spoken at multiple nutrition seminars and workshops throughout North America and Europe. She has been involved in numerous culinary projects, including Noma's Test Kitchen. She lives in Copenhagen with her husband and their son.
NATURALLY NOURISHED, by Sarah Pritton
Published by Jacqui Small
15th June, 2017
- Hardcover
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0804185409
- ISBN-13: 978-0804185400
Note - I was sent a copy of this book free of charge for review. I was not required to write a positive review. Any and all opinions are my own. I think it is a beautiful book and belongs in any kitchen where people are wanting to eat healthier and better without it costing them an arm and a leg! Many thanks to Jacqui Small for sending me this copy.
I think one of our favourite meals has to be Roast Chicken. That sweet moist meat . . . the crisp and moreish skin . . . so tasty. One might think that in the summer it is just too hot to roast a chicken, and most days that would probably be so, but what if I told you that you could roast a chicken in a fraction of the time that it normally takes and that you would end up with succulent meat and crisp skin? Here's my secret . . .
Its called Spatchcocking, and it really isn't much of a secret. Good cooks have been applying this cooking method to chicken and other birds for a very long time. And it is such a simple thing to do. All you need is a whole chicken and a good set of kitchen shears!
Spatchcocking involves removing the backbone of the chicken and then flattening it out, exposing more of the chicken to direct heat and ensuing that both the dark and white meat cook in approximately the same time and that the skin all over the chicken gets nice and crispy!
Removing the backbone is a relatively easy thing to do. You just cut down the backbone of the chicken on both sides of it. You can save the backbone for making stock later on down the road, so nothing is really wasted. Once the bone is removed . . .
You make a little snip in the white cartilage at the tip of the breast and then the bird quite simply loses all of its resistance and you can flatten it out just like a butterfly . . .
The chicken cooks much quicker, with a smaller bird, in as little amount of time as half an hour, but in a larger bird, about an hour tops. Its a simple thing but it works well.
Today I chose to slash my chicken all over by making cuts in the legs, thighs and breast with my kitchen scissors . . .
After that I rubbed it all over with a mix of olive oil and oregano leaves and a healthy sprinkling of seasalt and coarse black pepper.
Once it was done and resting, I roasted halved plum tomatoes in the pan juices for a further 15 minutes . . . so good . . . tomatoes roasted in chicken juices, until they are slightly soft and sticky . . . but the flavour doesn't stop there. The finished dish gets accented by mix of lemon zest, chopped parsley and fresh garlic . . . in other words . . . a gremolata.
There is no gravy needed with all of that. The sticky sweet roasted tomatoes . . . that oregano rub which roasts right into that chicken and those cuts . . . that tangy, herby, spicy gremolata . . . this is sooooooo good. You won't want to miss out on this one!
I don't slice the chicken when I go to serve it. I simply tear off pieces with a couple of forks. So tender and so tasty. Potatoes go well, but today I chose to serve it with some brown and wild rice and of course a tasty green salad on the side.
*Roast Chicken with Gremolata*
Serves 4
a large handful of fresh flat leaf parsley, choped (1/2 cup)
1 clove garlic, peeled and crushed
Preheat the oven to 220*C/425*F/ gas mark 7.
Place
the spatchcocked chicken on a large baking tray with sides. Cut some
slashes in the top of the legs, thighs and breasts with some kitchen
scissors. Mix together the oregano and olive oil. Rub this all over
the chicken. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Roast, uncovered,
for 1 hour or until the chicken is cooked through and the juices run
clear. Remove from pan, cover and set aside to rest.
Cut
the tomatoes in half lengthwise and place cut side up in the same
dish. Season with some salt and pepper. Return to the oven and roast,
uncovered, for 15 minutes.
Make the gremolata. Combine the lemon zest with the parsley and garlic. Sprinkle over the tomatoes and chicken and serve.
Today this went down a real treat and I have plenty of tender juicy chicken leftover to make another meal with tomorrow . . . I can't wait! Bon Appetit!
I am a HUGE fan of salads, and vegetables and pasta. Todd, not so much . . . but I am slowly converting him, and bringing him around to my way of thinking. Actually in all truth he loves my salads because, as he says, they are never boring!
I wish I had a pound/dollar for every time I have made Crispie Bars through the years. I would be able to retire to a tropical island, I have made that many! I am sure that I made them at least once a week, ir not more often, the whole time my family was growing up! They were a favourite of my ex husband and my children! They never lasted very long! They used to inhale them.
I never made unsual flavours or added anything to them. I just made the basic crispie bar. Marshmallows, butter, vanilla and the cereal. Easy peasy.
The kids loved to clean the pot out afterwards. They would all gather around it with spoons and fingers and lick/scrape that pot clean!
This is my youngest four in action. I am not sure where
big brother was!
I was quite intrigued when I saw this recipe for Cappuccino Crispies in one of my Cooking Light Cookbooks. (I think it was The Lazy Gourmet!)
This is a crispie bar for adults, with adult flavours . . . coffee . . . milky marshmallows . . . and not a scrap of fat in sight!
Which also makes it quite adult friendly. Most of us are watching our waistlines. (Unless you are very lucky.) Some of us are also watching our sugar intake, so I have to say upfront, this isn't for those people. Lots of sugar in the marshmallows, I'm afraid. So if you have to watch your sugar (like I do) these are not for you.
But if you are one of the lucky ones who doesn't need to watch their sugar intake, then you are sure to enjoy these quick and easy bars! The dusting of cocoa powder is my addition. Most times coffee shops dust cocoa powder over their cappuccino drinks! It added another grown up touch to these!
*Cappuccino Crispie Squares*
Makes 24 bars
unsweetened cocoa powder to dust
Yep, these are definitely for the grown-ups. Bon Appetit!
Ever had a night when you are decidely lacking in inspiration, and time . . . not to mention ingredients and yet you are starving? I reckon we all have nights like that! This recipe is perfect for those kinds of nights. A bit old fashioned, yes. A really old recipe, yes, undoubtedly. Delicious, yes! Its also quick and very easy to make.
This is a recipe which I adapted from a cookerybook entitled "The Supper Book," by the late Marion Cunningham. Published in 1992, it is a compliation of just what it says . . . supper dishes . . . old fashioned, nursery type of dishes . . . dishes that evoke the feelings of comfort and home. Economical in many instances and all delicious. I have always loved this book.
I have long been a lover of tinned tomatoes. I could just sit down and eat a tin with a spoon with only a piece of buttered white bread on the side. This recipe speaks to that deep rooted love. Simple ingredients put together magically to create something that is quite, quite tasty, and surprisingly hearty.
The original recipe called for finely chopped fresh tomatoes, two medium, and their juices. I did not have any, and so I used the tinned tomatoes. I am not overly fond of tomato skin in my food, so if that is you, and you are wanting to use fresh tomatoes, skin them first. You will thank me for that hint.
I am not sure what purpose the baking soda provides, so I left it in. In the original recipe it was stirred into the chopped fresh tomatoes. In my version, I just stirred it into the tinned tomatoes.
I suspect this is quite British in its roots. The Brits love meals served on toast. Scrambled egg on toast, tinned tomatoes on toast, beans on toast, poached eggs on toast, spaghetti on toast, mushrooms on toast. They just love to plunk things down on toast and then dig in. Small wonder. Toast, in my humble opinion, just makes most things taste even better!
*Tomato Rarebit*
Serves 4
1/4 tsp soda.
salt to tasteThis is the type of dish we both love very much. Simple, delicious and comforting. It's perfect for a weeknight, and it doesn't heat up the kitchen. All you need is a simple salad on the side and dinner is served! I had mine on whole wheat toast. Todd had his on white toast. Both are good. Bon Appetit!
Round tomatoes, deseeded, peeled, finely cut into pieces. This exquisite range offers four recipes, all with the taste and bouquet of Cirio’s authentic Italian tomatoes. They are all perfect as a base ingredient to prepare pasta sauces and enrich other recipes:
• Finely chopped tomatoes with a pinch of salt
• Finely chopped with a pinch of salt and a hint of basil
• Finely chopped tomatoes with a pinch of salt and chilli
• Finely chopped tomatoes with a pinch of salt, garlic and onion.
The small, lightweight light Tetra carton allows for easy stocking in your kitchen cupboards and it’s easier and safer to open than glass bottles or tin cans. Plus, as well as being convenient, the packaging is eco-friendly and reduces waste, which is in tune with today’s environmentally conscious consumer.
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